To give or not to give: Korean conundrum on Japan aid

Ju-min Park

3 Min Read

<p>South Korean activists pay a silent tribute to the victims of the earthquake and tsunami in Japan before holding an anti-Japan rally protesting Japan's sovereignty claim on the Dokdo islets, in front of the Japanese embassy in Seoul, in this March 30, 2011 file photo. The banner reads "Japan! Withdraw distortions of history (in Japanese history textbooks)!" REUTERS/Jo Yong-Hak/Files</p>

SEOUL (Reuters Life!) - South Koreans are caught between a rock and a hard place - literally as well as figuratively -- when it comes to giving cash donations to their neighbors in Japan after last month’s massive earthquake and tsunami.

Renewed anger over a group of rocky islets claimed by both nations -- known as Dokdo in South Korea and Takeshima in Japan -- has caused a sharp cooling in South Korean impulses to help.

At first, Korean pop singer Kim Jang-hoon, dubbed “the angel of donation” for his habit of donating many of his concert proceeds to the poor and campaigns to promote his country, asked his fans to put aside their decades-old animosity toward Japan over Dokdo in the wake of the 9.0 March 11 disaster that has left nearly 28,000 dead or missing.

Many ordinary South Koreans responded generously, and a dozen K-pop stars donated more than $5 million.

But the mood soon darkened after a Japanese education panel authorized the publication of school textbooks that assert Japan’s claims to the islets, which act as a stark reminder of Japan’s brutal colonial rule over Korea from 1910-1945.

For many, this meant all donations were off.

“It is heart-wrenching that Koreans with a big heart wanted to donate money for Japan, which keeps insisting on its sovereignty of the islands that are undeniably ours,” said Yeo Mi-ok, a 51-year-old art teacher staging a display of children’s drawings of the islets at a busy Seoul subway station.

A Seoul district office that raised about $10,000 for Japanese disaster relief changed its mind and sent most of the funds to a civic group promoting Korea’s claims to the islets, which are also a symbol of South Korea standing up to its neighbor.

“I asked myself, why did Japan do this at this tragic moment. We had to discuss what to do next with this fund,” said Ra Tae-sung, an official at the office in southwestern Seoul.

Prior to the quake, relations between the neighbors had been improving.

Tokyo has backed Seoul’s tough stance toward North Korea following the sinking in March 2010 of a naval ship, blamed by the South on Pyongyang, as well as the North’s bombardment of a South Korean island in November. They had even agreed to upgrade their military cooperation.

But for years, South Korea has rebuffed calls from Japan to discuss the Dokdo dispute at the International Court of Justice and announced plans to beef up governance of the islets through measures including research institutes in the area.

“Japan is not wise, making a lot of Koreans with sympathy feel more hostile than before,” said Choi Ji-yong, a 27-year-old office worker.